*By Samantha Errico*
Fashion designer Rachel Roy and daughter Ava Dash noticed that very few young adult novels featured Indian narratives. So they decided to write one themselves.
"We realized there have been so many retellings of Greek myths, so we decided that we wanted to be the first," Dash told Cheddar. "So we went through and found a story that really spoke to us."
"I asked her if she knew any Indian myths," Roy said of a telling interaction she had with her daughter, "and she said 'no, you haven't taught me any.'"
According to Roy, who is half-Indian, the book was also inspired by her father, who was born in Bangalore, India.
Eventually, the mother-daughter pair settled on "96 Words for Love," a story about young love and self-discovery. The coming-of-age myth follows a 17-year-old girl who "falls in love and forgets who she is," Dash said. The title, she added, refers to all 96 ways one can say the word "love" in Sanskrit.
Roy said that while she was developing the story, her then-teenage daughter was facing some of the same challenges as her fictional protagonist.
"What do I do next? Is it what my parents want me to do? Is it social media and what I see reflected in entertainment wants me to do?"
Above all, Roy said, she wants to empower her daughter to celebrate "what makes us beautiful both on the inside and on the outside."
For full interview [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/fashion-designer-rachel-roy-writes-young-adult-novel-with-daughter).
Easily track health stats like hydration and body composition through this smart strap and accompanying app.
Rallies, celebrations, and marches all over Brooklyn on Friday to celebrate the actual end of slavery 155 years ago, took on added significance in the wake of high profile police killings of Black Americans.
Christ Brandt, Chipotle's chief marketing officer, talked to Cheddar about the restaurant chain's first-ever Super Bowl commercial.
A mythical, ape-like creature that has captured the imagination of adventurers for decades has now become the target of a state lawmaker in Oklahoma.
For over a century, 105 miles of pipes underneath Manhattan's streets have delivered steam to some of the city's oldest and tallest buildings.
Jill and Carlo discuss the state of the pandemic, which now might best be described as a race against time between vaccines and the new variants. Also, Cali and NY start to ease covid restrictions, Biden reverses more Trump policies, and the new battle royale on Wall Street.
With millions of Americans waiting for their chance to get the coronavirus vaccine, a fortunate few are getting bumped to the front of the line as clinics scramble to get rid of extra, perishable doses at the end of the day.
Chinese officials say rescuers have found the bodies of nine workers killed in explosions at a gold mine, raising the death toll to 10.
Someone bought a winning ticket for the $1.05 billion Mega Millions jackpot at a grocery store outside of Detroit.
Some promising developments in the battle to get COVID hospitalizations down as vaccinations ramp up, and the debate over what to do about schools. That plus all the headlines you missed this weekend, including a Super Bowl matchup for the ages.
Load More